Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism


Baillie, Joanna (Vol. 151) | Maureen A. Dowd (essay date fall 1998)

Maureen A. Dowd (essay date fall 1998)

SOURCE: Dowd, Maureen A. “‘By the Delicate Hand of a Female’: Melodramatic Mania and Joanna Baillie's Spectacular Tragedies.” European Romantic Review 9, no. 4 (fall 1998): 469-500.

[In the following essay, Dowd shows how and why Baillie distanced herself from German Sturm und Drang melodrama even while using its techniques—especially those of grand spectacle, the depiction of the lower and middle classes, and the use of moral pedagogy, The critic also notes the parallels between Baillie's works and those of Friedrich Schiller.]

Recent criticism of Joanna Baillie has traced the similarities between Baillie's comprehensive 1798 “Introductory Discourse” to the first volume of her Series of Plays on the Passions and Wordsworth's celebrated “Preface” to the Lyrical Ballads.1 Discussing Wordsworth's aesthetic theory in the context of popular German drama,...

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